The polishing was done with a cylo using the yellow, blue, and white pads. The only polish I used was Mothers aluminum polish. I then followed that with a coating of liquid glass, and plan on adding another coat this week. Prior to this I did a high speed strip last year, and had the blue stripe painted. I may decide to add the smaller blue decal over it if I find one. The finish isn't quite as nice as some of the ones I've seen using 3M products, but I don't think it's too far off. With the finish being different on the 81 versus the older trailers I don't know how far I could go with it. I have about 15 hours in the process this year, and will pick up a couple more with the second coat of LG. That's it for this year, time to go camping.
Charlie

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Computers manufactured by companies such as IBM, Compaq and millions of others are by far the most popular with about 70 million machines in use worldwide. Macintosh fans note that cockroaches are far more numerous than humans and that numbers alone do not denote a higher life form. -NY Times 11/91

The ice clock fell through on Lake Dillon about 2 weeks ago, and it's fully melted now. What I consider the best campground on the lake is closed for the season for Pine beetle tree removal, but that still leaves 3 open.

Sorry to drag up such an old post, but you mentioned that use used the blue and white pads on the cyclo for polishing. I wanted to know how you used the white pads on the last cut VS fleece cloth. What was your process?

Did you just use the white foam pad until it was filled with black polish, then wash and cycle in the next set?

Sorry to drag up such an old post, but you mentioned that use used the blue and white pads on the cyclo for polishing. I wanted to know how you used the white pads on the last cut VS fleece cloth. What was your process?

Did you just use the white foam pad until it was filled with black polish, then wash and cycle in the next set?

You need to have a lot of extra pads. I do have the yellow cotton pads but they're really rough so I would stick to the foam pads. Yellow to start if it's oxidized then blue or green then the off white and finally white. You'll no you're finished when it pleases you. I now only use the white for cleaning or to apply my liquid glass sealer. The off white pad will bring up your final shine.
The earlier stages will blacken your yellow pads quicker and the pads seem to go farther between changes in the final stages. How many passes you'll need to make varies a great deal with how bad it is. I now rarely bring out the yellow pads and polish only every other year. A full polish with the green pads using mothers followed by another polish with the off white pads, then a cleaning using liquid glass cleaner with the white pads and finally applying the liquid glass with a cloth then bringing it to a shine with the white pads and I'm finished. I've never liked the result of cloth for polishing, it can easily create swirls that are hard to get out.
Another good way to start on tough areas is to use Eagle polishing wool before starting with the cyclo. It will quickly turn a panel black but keep working with it past that point and it will remove a lot of oxidation. Then just wash it off with a soapy cloth, dry and move on.
I clean my pads in a bucket with soapy water then run them through the washing machine and if I have time I let them air dry. They don't work well if they're wet.